It happens only on windows with chrome.
For any reason, click event isn't correctly triggered and it seems work correctly
with pointerup.
And it seems that when drawing a svg on an OffscreenCanvas we need to wait
a little in order to be able to transfer it: it's why this patch adds
a check on the canvas content.
This has been deprecated since version `2.15.349`, which is a year ago.
Removing this will also simplify some upcoming changes, specifically outputting of JavaScript modules in the builds.
This removes the only remaining old and non-standard handling of exports in the `web/`-folder, since some initial attempts at outputting JavaScript modules in the builds have identified this file as a potential problem.
While this uses a hard-coded list, for overall simplicity, I don't believe that that's a big problem since:
- Generating this file automatically would require a bunch more parsing *every single time* that the library is built.
- The official API-surface doesn't change often enough for this to really impede development in any significant way.
- The added unit-test helps ensure that this list cannot accidentally become outdated.
When the editor is invisible (because on a non-rendered page) its parent is null.
But when we undo its deletion, we need to have a parent to attach it.
Given that this is accessed multiple times per page in the viewer, that leads to a number of (strictly speaking unneeded) function calls and allocated Objects for each invocation. By converting `layerProperties` to a, lazily initialized, Object we can avoid this.
When PR 17015 removed the `disabled` handling for the "Save"-button it left a bunch of now unused CSS rules behind, which seems like a simply oversight.
Rather than shipping "dead" CSS rules, let's remove those until such a time that they're actually needed.
The old pre-processor used for CSS, and HTML, files leaves comments intact which unnecessarily contributes to the overall size of the *built* CSS files (note that the built JavaScript files don't include comments).
Rather than trying to "hack" comment removal into the pre-processor it seems easier to use a PostCSS plugin instead. The one potential issue is that it also affects *some* whitespaces, and it's not clear to me if this'll work with the various CSS-related tests that run in mozilla-central.
Please refer to https://www.npmjs.com/package/postcss-discard-comments for additional information.
*For many non-English locales the translated strings will be longer, which is easy to forget about during development/review.*
Note how for some locales (e.g. Swedish) the altText-button end up looking horizontally "cramped", hence it seems reasonable to add a bit of inline padding to improve this.